Saturday, January 31, 2026

Introduction





















































A Primer on Performance Management 


The Truth about Performance Management


Performance management is known as the “Achilles’ Heel” of human capital management, and it is the most diffi cult HR system to implement in organizations.

Important data from Watson Wyatt :


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Only 30% of workers felt their company’s performance management system helps them improve their performance. 

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Less than 40% said their systems provide clear performance goals, generate honest feedback, or use technology effectively.


In fact, performance management is consistently one of the lowest, if not the lowest, rated area in employee satisfaction surveys. Yet, performance management is the key process through which work gets done. It’s how organizations communicate expectations and drive behavior to achieve important goals; it’s also how organizations identify ineffective performers for development programs or other personnel actions.


A Primer on Performance Management

Given the critical role of performance management and its inherent challenges, this book provides  .  .  .


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Time-proven methods, down-to-earth tips, and nuts-and-bolts advice for designing and implementing a successful performance management system, explained in the context of practical realities. 


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Real-life examples to help negotiate the obstacles and organizational barriers faced when implementing performance management. 


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Training exercises and example tools, complete with forms and procedures needed to build a fair, effective, and high impact performance management system.


What Makes Performance Management So Hard?

There are genuine reasons why both managers and employees have diffi culties with performance management. Managers avoid performance management activities, especially providing developmental feedback to employees, because they don’t want to risk damaging relationships with the very individuals they count on to get work done. Employees avoid performance management activities, especially discussing their development needs with managers, because they don’t want to jeopardize their pay or advancement. In addition, many employees feel that their managers are unskilled at discussing their performance and coaching them on how to improve. These attitudes, on the part of both managers and employees, result in poor performance management processes that simply don’t work well. 

Another problem is that many managers and employees don’t understand the benefi ts of effective performance management. They often view it as a paperwork drill required by human resources, where ratings need to be submitted on a yearly basis for record-keeping purposes – a necessary evil that warrants the minimum investment of time. What many managers don’t realize is that performance management is the most important tool they have for getting work done. It’s essential for high performing organizations, and one of their most important responsibilities. Done correctly, performance management communicates what’s important to the organization, drives employees to achieve important goals, and implements the organization’s strategy.

On the other hand, done poorly, performance management has signifi cant negative consequences for organizations, managers, and employees. Managers who conduct performance management ineffectively will not only fail to realize its benefi ts, but they can damage relationships with or undermine the self-confi dence of their employees. If employees do not feel they are being treated fairly, they become de-motivated, or worse, they may legally challenge the organization’s performance management practices. This can result in serious problems that are expensive, distracting, and damaging to an organization’s reputation and functioning.


The Goal of This Book

At some level of formality, performance management exists in every organization. Because it is such a vital part of organizational functioning, this book provides practical advice to leaders, human resources professionals, managers, and employees about how to achieve the maximum benefi ts from performance management. Although the book centers on design and implementation of performance management systems, many of the topics are relevant to individual managers and employees who are trying to get the most from their own performance management activities.

The approach offered here focuses on using performance management to achieve important business outcomes through driving effective employee results and behaviors. It is based on best practices that have evolved from research and lessons learned from implementing performance management in many diverse organizations. While many of the general ideas and best practices discussed here are not new, what is new is how these are combined into the recommended performance management process and steps and, most important, the focus on what it really takes to implement the best practices so that performance management adds value, achieves its goals, and produces results.

So often, when people think about performance management, the basic process and tools seem so straightforward and easy to implement that they miss what it really takes to gain value and results from a performance management process. What happens is that “fl avor of the day” performance management practices are enthusiastically and readily adopted, without considering their fi t within the given organizational context – specifi cally, whether the infrastructure and support are there for successful implementation. The reality is that best practices should not be automatically adopted just because someone has christened them as such. Instead, performance management needs to be designed in light of the climate for, commitment to, and desired outcomes from performance management in a given organization. In the end, the best-designed tools mean nothing if organizational members do not believe in the value of performance management and use performance management processes effectively. Therefore, it is critically important to assess the particular circumstances within an organization, be realistic about what can be achieved in a given situation, and then implement performance management processes that make the most sense.

In light of the truth about performance management, the remainder of this book :

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provides a roadmap and practical steps for developing resultsoriented performance management processes that actually work 

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helps you understand what it really takes to implement best practices successfully in your organization, and importantly 

shows you how to determine which performance management options will be the most successful in your situation.


The book is divided into three parts. Part I contains introductory information and includes this chapter and the next, which provide a brief history of performance management that explains how today’s best practices evolved. Part II focuses on the performance management process – what questions need to be addressed, what steps need to be included, and how to implement performance management systems successfully. Part III provides nuts and bolts guidance on how to develop effective performance measures.














Developing Objectives and Measuring Results

There are two primary activities involved in developing measures of results. The first is identifying performance objectives that state the ...